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3978 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Pulling

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Punch29.06.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Juni 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] dº; a bit too lon People arrived at Long's; took long walks, and long pulls at [...]
[...] negatively know about it—I lie, considering present circumstances. I am here, supposed to be, what my friend, ENGLEMORE calls “picking myself up,” and “pulling myself together.” Happy Thought.—Like a puzzle. Mem.—Note this for Typical Developments, Wol. I. (or somewhere, if not room for it here on [...]
[...] i.fine thought in this, rather hidden, but to be worked out. Do it ter. The process of pulling myself together and picking myself up, seems to consist chiefly in laying myself out, not to shine in Society; but away from Society, in the sun. After two weeks of this method [...]
[...] seems to consist chiefly in laying myself out, not to shine in Society; but away from Society, in the sun. After two weeks of this method I am partly pulled º and slightly picked up. Without a family, I am a family man. Inexact quotation which occurs to me, “Some achieve families, and some have families thrust [...]
[...] hers. On this she prefers consulting me to going to a Doctor. She is aware that I once went to Aix-la-Chapelle for rheumatism, and that, more or less, ever since, I’ve been studying pulling my self together and picking myself up; with one exceptional time when my whole object was to pull myself down. [...]
The lounger29.07.1786
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Juli 1786
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] a clump. The garden was the next fubjećt of amendment, in which an excellent fruit-wall was pulled down, to have it rebuilt on a new plan ; by which new plan we have got a very beauti ful wall, and trees admirably well drefied, but [...]
[...] feffion, who, as Mr. Quadrant faid, knew the capabilities of ground. Then there was fuch a pulling down of walls to make little fields large, and a planting of hedges to make large fields. little ; every thing, in ſhort, was turned topfy [...]
[...] execution. There have been fuch bickerings amongſt the Gentlemen about widening of roads, removing of dunghills, pulling down cot tages, and puniſhing of vagrants, that one half of the neighbours are fcarce in ſpeaking-terms [...]
Punch19.04.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. April 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] With JAcobson and HoARE. PoolE he. pulled without a shirt [...]
[...] On, CARR pulled away like fun, And MoRRIson an Made up the boat that won. | [...]
[...] Whose well-pulled cutter , . Did the trick in Sixty Two. [...]
[...] PULL ARMSTRONG, PULL ADMIRALTY. [...]
[...] “It is very troublesome to be sure!” (This is when the room is as full of smoke, as it can hold.). “If you can throw all the windows and doors open only for a quarter of an hour º it go as sweetly as possible. It never does pull properly, until it has fully warmed up to its work.” “The cause of its smoking is, because you put on too many coals, Sir. You shouldn't put [...]
[...] All a snake-mother asks is peace to warn and range and rank its Precious ovarian treasure, safe and snug, beneath the blankets. But if ſolks keep pulling, poking, peeping, prying, fiddle-ſaddling, It will end, as it has ended, sure as eggs is eggs, in addling. [...]
[...] Like boys, who when they’ve sowed a seed, still of its progress doubting, Will pull it up from time to time, to see if it is sprouting, - So you in your anxiety to see my Pythons small, Have poked and pulled and fingered me, till you’ve got none at all. [...]
Punch13.05.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. Mai 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] E. or awhile to think what else! I have got a sort of headache ut not quite a headache. I mean not a headache that makes you say, “O do—” I have got it is true to pull down the blinds—“O do go away', ; ; ; ; No, I don't want anything, thank you—” (“Thank you” being ven very politely, and meaning “May the anathemas,” [...]
[...] I will ring. I do ring. It takes a good deal of ringing to fetch up our enormous Housemaid at the lodgings. She is so big that she can't come up with one pull: three good ones do it as a rule, and then not without a consultation with some one fº the Čook) [...]
[...] invisible. The ceremony of ringing the bell for MARY is as follows:— One pull. No effect whatever. - Second pull. louder one; audible as sounding down-stairs [...]
[...] know. Üp-stairs, I think.” That's another curious thing, she's always up-stairs. - Third pull. Much louder, and of a remonstrative character. Mem. Subject for something, “IRells and Bellringers, by One of Themselves.” Also, “IIow to Wait, by a Waiter.” Think it out. [...]
[...] of Themselves.” Also, “IIow to Wait, by a Waiter.” Think it out. “GEOR-GEE-NER / / " - - Third pull is immediately followed by a bell up-stairs. This brings out MARY (she is about six feet high, and would have made a capital companion to a plough-hoy, as a plough-girl, [...]
[...] &c., and will she oblige me by º out and sending the child away. She will. I hear her go to the #. door, but, in the inter val between the first bell-pull and this, GEORGEENER ilas responded to the summons, and the child has disappeared. MARY lumps back again, and says through the door, “There ain't none, Sir," and away [...]
[...] Facelious Bus-Driver (offering to pull up). LUGGAGE . " Bus-Driver. “BEg PARD’N, SIR. [...]
Punch13.06.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. Juni 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] The DUKE of BUCCLEUCH said Scotch recruits liked looking forward to a pension. Whereat the House laughed. But how much good is not thrift at the bottom of, and what gives SAwNEY his pull over PAT and JoHN so much as his eye to the main chance? In the Commons, after MR. O'DoNNELL, the unseated for Galway, had [...]
[...] appeared, and disappeared on being politely informed by the SPEAKER that he had no business there, we had an awful scene: FRANCE at the Bar of the House-FRANCE, pulled up-FRANCE solemnly admonished—FRANCE saying something awfully like “Admonition be bothered!” and doing something awfully like taking a sight at the SPEAKER, [...]
[...] FRANCE often does, made matters worse by the explana tion. So the bar was pulled out for FRANCE, and FRANCE was pulled up to the bar; had to “toe the line” (as sailors call it); , was solemnly told by the SPEAKER to [...]
[...] of their King to be! Thursday.—The Lords presented the ARCHIBISHOP OF CANTERBURY with the crook for pulling up his black sheep with, by 137 to 29-in spite of the DUKES OF MARLBoROUGH and RUTLAND, who were for postponing the Public Worship Regulation Bill for a year, “to give [...]
[...] The Derby win on Epsom Course, And pull a Cart right through ! [...]
PunchTitelblatt 04.1845
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 01. April 1845
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] --tºs---Ex-s Port TH+ young. A kitten should always be kept where there are children; when they are tired of pulling its tail, they can put it into their fathers' boots. A box of colours is also a source of great amusement, [...]
[...] seven, and go through their evolutions of welsh-rabbits, chops, and may get a bite at a capsicum. On wet days they should be allowed kidneys, till three in the morning. The serjeant is to be met at the to put peas into the piano, and thump the keys with their drum bar. The bounty for entering this fine corps varies from a bowl of 'sticks. Train them to pull gentlemen's whiskers, and wipe their punch to “goes all round. |lollipopped hands on ladies' dresses. [...]
Punch10.11.1855
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. November 1855
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] pull. r Hang up his fiddle and his bow. remand the latter for the purpºse of learning “something about” the He a match for the Germans *—ſom, unless that “something” has reference to the matter imme [...]
[...] on any ºl. pair of shoulders, seems likely to be torn to tatters in the tugging and pulling that it has experienced from the rather inferior hands that have had a [...]
[...] the top. “Why, put yourself in the bucket that is up there, and when you are down here we will talk about it.” The Englishman did as he was bid, and his superior weight in descending had the effect of pulling up the Cossack, who was in the opposite bucket. “Thank you, my good friend, a thousand times,” he exclaimed, when he had safely reached the surface, “wait there, please, until I come back, and pay you the two [...]
[...] roubles,” and he went away grinning hugely in his sleeve. How AN ENGLISHMAN was DoNE by A Cossack.-An Englishman and a Cossack agreed to pull for a tallow-candle. It was to be held between their teeth, and the were to pull and pull until one side was the conqueror. The candle was firmly fixe when the Cossack said, “Are you ready?” The stupid Englishman exclaimed, [...]
[...] were to pull and pull until one side was the conqueror. The candle was firmly fixe when the Cossack said, “Are you ready?” The stupid Englishman exclaimed, “Ye-e-e-es;” but no sooner was his mouth opened than the crafty Cossack pulled away the candle, so that he had the whole of the luscious morsel to himself. THE SUMMIT or BRITISH Folly.—Will it be believed that the English place long [...]
[...] Sprightly little Boy, jumping about, loquitur. “Oh! Crikey, Criminy! Añºſ". Here’s the Dentist º: to morrow, and Fa has promised me sixpence for every tooth that I have pulled out!” [...]
Punch25.07.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. Juli 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Makes such heat tame. Or when, with bending oars, May be distinguished, if you deftly place We' reach after reach of glorious Thames, Brandy and soda in your spectrum-glass. A lady steering; with each well-pulled stroke The nece cat comes never near The body lightens, and the spirit grows # realm: the far more necessary do Stronger and clearer. O, the drowsy woods, ould soon reduce him to his last mol-row; [...]
[...] the hands of the dial, and advancing by retrogression. - - - - Fight it, FoRSTER—fight it to the last man in town, the last hour of the Session, the last breath in your political body. Now is the moment for a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull altogether from Her Majesty's Opposition, if there be such a thing! Wednesday.—MR. DISRAELI cleared the floor for the fight on the Public Worship, Bill. There was a demure twinkle in the eye, an ominous calm in the bearing of the RIGHT HoNoURABLE B. HECTOR, and a smouldering fire, dark and dangerous, in the look of the [...]
[...] crowd grew louder and louder. GUILLAUME took a run and jum and vanished through the window. WIDDICOMB JUNIOR follow next, but his spurs caught. He was pulled, through somehow. The Marky was the last to leave. He crammed his white hat firmly on his head, ran, plunged forward, and disappeared. [...]
[...] COme, as a rise to those of us who know, experimentally, what a very long face a woman can pull. [...]
Punch28.10.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. Oktober 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] “It was owing to the efforts of the United Kingdom Alliance that the power had been taken away from the Excise to grant beer-licences, and it merely required a strong pull and a long pull by the temperance reformers of the country to compel the Government to give them what they asked.” [...]
[...] Let them take a strong pull and a long pull at the drinking fountain, and stick to that, not seek to compel others to. Or, if they had rather, they may limit themselves, to taking their pull at [...]
[...] RoBERT BUSSIT sold his house, pulled down the Tower of Teazer, and paid the money. It was a sickener; it broke his spirit. - - Defeated at ever Fº RoBERT fell into a deep dejection, and took to tumbling for a [...]
[...] logical teaching at the Universities; likewise of all denominational Schools and Colleges. Then, of course, they would insist not only on overthrowing the Church, but also on pulling down dissenting chapels and meeting-houses, all except those wherein Dissent was carried to the extremity of Atheism, with which any theology would [...]
Galignani's messenger13.10.1826
  • Datum
    Freitag, 13. Oktober 1826
  • Erschienen
    Paris
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Paris
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] cost only seven hundred and twenty thousand francs (30,00 l.), but I sºppose the expense may be somewhat more than double; but it is built in a wet situation, and is to be pulled down.” Mon Dieu, I said to myself; pull down a million and a half of francs—this is nore distress. “And pray, my Lord, how much [...]
[...] the English Lord, with a proud smile. “And what is to be done with it now the Fnglish King will go to it no more ?” “l ima gime it will be pulled down" “Parºleu–pull down more than the whole revenue of the King my master; this is much distress.” So my Lord said no more.—Last Saturday I rode on horseback [...]
[...] price it ſetches will go far to relieve the hunger of the distressed people in Spitalfields and Manchester.” “No, no,” said Mr. P—, “you interrupted me, Signor; it is going to be pulled down!” “Parºleu; what, pull down the Cottage orné, pull down Brighton, and pull down Carlton-house * “Excuse me,” said I [...]
[...] rode on, and I beheld on my left a vast house building, with por ticoes, colonnades, and costly ornaments. “That,” said Mr. P. “is the new palace. We pulled down the massive structure which gratified his Majesty's father and mother, and we are now erecting a truly vast palace, to please our Sovereign's present [...]
[...] taste. We are also to have a costly and magnificent piece of fancy work, called a triumphal arch, at Hyde Park-corner; and as soon as these are ſinished, we intend to pull down the –— and the –—” but here our conversation was interrupted ; we [...]
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